IATA has released the international traffic
results for September 2010, that show international passenger
traffic had a 10.5% year-on-year increase which is significantly
stronger than the 6.5% rise recorded for August. International
freight traffic recorded a 14.8% year-on-year increase, which is
significantly weaker than the 19% rise recorded in August.
The contrast between the performance of freight
and passenger markets provides a mixed picture for industry
performance. Seasonally adjusted figures show that, compared to
the previous month (August), passenger traffic expanded by 2.1%
while freight markets contracted by an equal 2.1%.
The rebound in growth in passenger markets during September
can be attributed to normal volatility in travel patterns
accentuated by special factors such as the effect of the Ramadan.
Passenger capacity expanded by 7.3%, below the 10.5% growth in
volumes, pushing global load factors up to 80%. This is a
significant improvement on the 77.7% recorded for September last
year.
While freight markets were expected to weaken
towards year-end, September’s decline was larger than anticipated.
Consumer and business confidence remains weak in many parts of the
world. Re-stocking lifted freight markets earlier in the year, but
this has not been followed by spending to solidify the economic
recovery. Compared to September 2009, freight capacity has
increased by 11.9%, below the 14.8% increase volumes, pushing
cargo load factors to 52.4%.
“It is good news that
the recovery in passenger markets continued in September. But the
freight numbers are worrying. Freight activity has fallen 6% since
May’s post-crisis peak. What we see in air cargo markets is
inevitably reflected in the broader economy,” said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA’s Director General and CEO. As international air
cargo accounts for 35% of the value of goods traded internationally, it is a leading indicator of economic activity.
International Passenger Traffic
• North
American carriers saw their traffic climb back to pre-recession
(early 2008) levels during the month with an 11.1% increase in passenger demand compared to the previous September. This
outstripped a 7.2% capacity expansion. The region recorded the
strongest passenger load factors at 84.1%.
• European
carriers met an 8.4% increase in demand over the previous year
with a 5.9% increase in capacity. The region’s carriers reported
an average load factor of 82.6%. The region is now 2% above
pre-recession levels.
• Asia Pacific carriers posted an
8.6% traffic increase over the previous September against a
capacity increase of 6.9%. While the region led the recovery with
an early surge in demand, growth in 2010 has been largely flat.
Traffic in the region remains 2% below the pre-crisis peak of
early 2008.
• Middle Eastern carriers led the industry
growth with a 23.9% increase compared to 2009. The earlier
occurrence of Ramadan dampened demand in August, but boosted
September’s traffic. This outstripped capacity growth of 15.3%.
Nonetheless, load factors of 76.8% were below the industry’s 80%
performance.
• Latin American carriers posted the
industry’s weakest growth at 6.6% with a 0.5% increase in
capacity. The weakness is largely due to the ceasing of all
operations by Mexicana.
• African carriers reported a 16%
growth in demand over the previous September against a 10.1%
increase in capacity. The region is now 7% higher than the
pre-recession levels of early 2008.
International
Freight Traffic
• September marked the second consecutive
month of seasonally adjusted declines in freight demand (-1% in
August, -2.1% in September). Freight volumes are 6% below their
May peak and is equivalent to pre-crisis levels.
• European
carriers recorded an 11.1% increase in freight demand compared to
the same month in 2009. Although European exports have been helped
with the weak Euro, freight demand for European carriers remains
14% below pre-recession levels.
• North American carriers
recorded a 13% growth in September, down from the 21.2% recorded
in August, which leaves the region 1% below pre-recession levels.
• Asia Pacific carriers recorded a 15% increase in freight
demand over the previous year, a significant decline from the
22.3% growth recorded in August. This took the region’s carriers
back to the pre-recession levels of early 2008 and, with their
44% market share, contributed the most to the global drop in
freight demand.
• Middle East carriers bucked the declining
trend with a 24% increase over previous-year levels. Even
through this is less than the 24.2% recorded in August, when
adjusted for seasonality this represents an increase of 1.4% over
August levels. Moreover, when compared to pre-recession levels,
the region’s carriers are carrying a third more traffic than they
did prior to the recession.
“The industry’s
situation is volatile. Passenger traffic represents about three
quarters of the industry’s revenues. While September’s passenger
growth is reassuring, the accelerating decline of air freight,
including in Asia, is an early indicator of some turbulence
ahead,” said Bisignani.
“Government actions can impact the
sustainability of the recovery. Austerity measures will dampen
demand. When combined with new or increased taxation, as we have
seen in Germany and the UK, the challenges are even greater,” Bisignani
added. “Governments must understand that air transport is
an economic catalyst. Last year, we saw that a EUR312 million
departure tax in the Netherlands cost the Dutch economy EUR1.2
billion. Further taxing the industry makes no sense when the focus
of governments should be on making the recovery sustainable.”
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September 2010
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